Methodology for Calculating Latency of GPS Probe Data

Author:

Wang Zhongxiang1,Hamedi Masoud2,Young Stanley3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, A. James Clark School of Engineering, 8136 Paint Branch Drive, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20740

2. Center for Advanced Transportation Technology, 5000 College Avenue, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20740

3. National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 15013 Denver West Parkway, Golden, CO 80401

Abstract

Crowdsourced GPS probe data, such as travel time on changeable-message signs and incident detection, have been gaining popularity in recent years as a source for real-time traffic information to driver operations and transportation systems management and operations. Efforts have been made to evaluate the quality of such data from different perspectives. Although such crowdsourced data are already in widespread use in many states, particularly the high traffic areas on the Eastern seaboard, concerns about latency—the time between traffic being perturbed as a result of an incident and reflection of the disturbance in the outsourced data feed—have escalated in importance. Latency is critical for the accuracy of real-time operations, emergency response, and traveler information systems. This paper offers a methodology for measuring probe data latency regarding a selected reference source. Although Bluetooth reidentification data are used as the reference source, the methodology can be applied to any other ground truth data source of choice. The core of the methodology is an algorithm for maximum pattern matching that works with three fitness objectives. To test the methodology, sample field reference data were collected on multiple freeway segments for a 2-week period by using portable Bluetooth sensors as ground truth. Equivalent GPS probe data were obtained from a private vendor, and their latency was evaluated. Latency at different times of the day, impact of road segmentation scheme on latency, and sensitivity of the latency to both speed-slowdown and recovery-from-slowdown episodes are also discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference2 articles.

1. HaghaniA., HamediM., and SadabadiK. I-95 Corridor Coalition Vehicle Probe Project: Validation of Inrix Data July–September 2008. I-95 Corridor Coalition, College Park, Md., 2009.

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